The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 18, 1932, Page 3

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Correspondence Briefs —=— SOLDIERS LEARNING (By a Worker Correspondent) PRINCETON, N. J.—At the uni- versity here they have @ company of artillery men, regular army men, four French 15's field guns, and four American 3-inch field guns, which they practice with regularf¥. One of the soldiers told me his captain said all the armed forces were to be call- ed out to do duty this election, which, I guess, is a plan to terrorize the workers when they go to the polls. This same artillery man also told me that this company had been talk- ing about the workers’ fight against starvation, and agreed that if they were called out against the workers they would throw down their guns. os oe HARLAN TRIAL (By a Worker Correspondent) HARLAN, Ky. — An outstanding example of the corruption of capital- ist government is seen on the trial of the miners here in the famous Evarts “riot” cases, Despite over- whelming evidence that clears these men they are being railroaded to life sentence. Each witness who produces a point in favor of the defendants is jailed. He is charged with conspiracy and his testimony dicharged. The jury of rich landowners are only too glad to cooperate as they are all union haters. The Harlan Daily Enterprise has been an efficient tool of the bosses in these trials. Poore is the fifth worker to be tried. Only one has escaped, because the machine made an errer of having small poor farmers on the jury and | they are not sufficiently prejudiced | against the miners. This has been “corrected” by the bosses. HORIUCHI ON WAY TO. SOVIET UNION Doak Tried to Deport | Him to Japan 1 SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Aug. 17.—! ‘Tetsuji Horiuehi, one of the Imperial | Vallay prisoners whom William Doak | has for the past several months been trying to deport to fascist Japan, de- parted for the Soviet Union on 8, S.| Portland today. Horiuchi had served) twenty-seven months in Folsom) Prison for organizing agricultural | workers to fight against starvation: Th2 International Labor Defense through mass pressure of the workers | won voluntary departure to the So- viet Union in record time, this ter- minating a long and bitter struggle to prevent the deportation of Ho- riuchi to Japan, Danny Roxas, another of the prisoners who was arrested with Horiuchi, was released on parole by | by the prison authorities one month after the original time set for his release. xas is now working on a farm in Woodland and will leave soon for the Philippine Islands to rejoin his family, 7,000 new yearly subscriptions by November 1, Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season bungalows HEAVY INDUSTRY IN SOVIET UNION = OVERTAKING CAPITALIST TECHNIQUE Tron, Steel Production in First 5 Months of This Year Adds to Struc- ture of Socialist Industry in USSR | On A Collective Farm A scientific agriculturalist explaining to a group of collective farm women all about the breeding of cattle. Earth Region of the Soviet Union. Photo taken in Central Black ANTI-JAPANESE BOYCOTT GROWS Tokyo Threatens New Blood Baths The smashing victory of the Chi- nese Red Army in Hupeh Province against Nanking’s main army has given tremendous impetus to the anti-Japanese boycott and other anti-imperialist, anti-Nanking ac- tions of the messes in the big cities of China. The anti-Japanese boycott movement especially has spread rap- idly within the past two weeks. Picketing of Japanese shops has been resumed in Shanghai, Canton and several other Chinese cities: Chinese merchants handling Japanese goods/ ‘are threatened with sharp reprisals by the angry masses. As @ result, Japanese trade with China is almost at a standstill. Th Japanese yen has dropped to a ne record low during the past week. The Japanese imperialists are now threatening the revolutionary work- ers of Shanghai, South China, with &@ new blood bath in an effort to crush the resistance of the Chinese masses and force them to buy Japa~ nese goods. The Chinese Chamber of Com: merce in Tientsin, North China, was bombed yesterday as a protest against the traitorous activities of its mem- bers in supporting Japanese trade and otherwise helping the Japanese army. A few days before the prin- cipal department store in the Japa- nese concession which hag heen handling Japanese goods was also hombe In the meantime, the victorious Chinese Red Army is pushing a re- lentless pursuit of the Nanking troops in Hupeh Province, while the Chinese Soviet Republic has recently dispatched another Red Army of 60,000 men to capture the city of Nanchang in the northwestern cor- ner of Kinagsi Province and gener- ally mop up the last remaining Nan-~ king troops in that section. Read _ the Daily Worker! Bring the DAILY to the “fOWARD SOVIET Sale Price “THE SOVIET WORKER,” by “fHE LAND Usual Sale Pri and Farms, te Jobless Workers and Bonus Marchers! FIND OUT WHAT IS HAPPENING TO THE WORKING CLASS OF THE UNITED STATES AND ALL OVER THE WORLD News of the Class Struggle Every Day! :) PREMIUM COMRADE, ge! be.7 UNTIL NOVEMBER FIRST! FREE With One-Year Subs AMERICA,” by Williams. Z. Foster. Cloth Boum Freeman. Cloth Bound, Sale WITHOUT 'INEMPLO’ INT”—Soviet Pietorial, Bosra Covers, C ey, Se, Shops, Factories, Mills ‘Usual 2B Price__$1.80 $1.50 SCULPTURED or SCULPTURED HEAD OF LE: OTHER PREMIUMS WITH ice. i HEAD OF LENIN—PRAMED— FREE With Six-Month Subs “LABOR FACT BOOK”—MUMORIES OF LENIN ROVING PLANNED ECONOMY” SUBSCRIPTION RATE: $6.60 YER YEAR SPECIAL OFFER-—-YEARLY SUB TO THE SATURDAY FEATURE DAILY WORKER—52 ISSUES—FOR $1.00 ALL SHORT-TERM SUBS! RUEGGS SCORE , COURT DECISIONS \Fight Move to Appoint “Defense” Lawyers (Cable By Inprectrr.) SHANGHAI, August 17.—The ses- |sion of the court yesterday in the farcical trial of Paul and Gertrude |Ruegg was occupied with the read- jing of the court records of August 10, 11 and 12, the accused correcting jnumerous mistakes, omissions and | distortions in the course of the read- jing. Several of these corrections | were arbitrarily rejected by the pres- iding judge “because he didn’t re- {member the exact wording of the statements by the accused. Refused to Sign Records The accused then refused to sign the records since the court rejected these corrections and also refused to ranslate the Chinese text into Eng~ |lish. The accused elso withdrew theft | signatures from the records of “the Supreme Court. stating that these records also abound with mistakes and deliberate distortions which were discovered when the defense lawyer translated them. The judge produced a list of the articles allegedly found during the police search of the reoms of the |accused. The list was prepared yés- terday by the detectives of the Brit- ish police force in Shanghai. The taceused pointed out that the lists |were unsigned, unwitriessed and un- sealed and therefore cannot be con- sidered as valid evidenee. The ac- cused requested the court to produce all articles seized according to the protocols. This request was also re- fused after hot arguments between the accused and the court. Court In Farcical Trial In concluding the session, the pres- iding ‘judge announced that since the accused did not authorize their law- yer to speak in their defense, the court will appoint two lawyers for defence according to law, The ac- cused reiterated their refusal to be party to the farcical trial, and de- clared again that the court was in- competent to try them. They stated categorically their protests against the appointment of lawyers by the court, declaring they will not ¢o- operate with these lawyers or with the court since this is only a cen- tinuation of the “same faree and comedy.” ‘This, they declared, was further proved in the fact that the proposed lawyers had not even been attending the trials. CUBAN DOCTORS STRIKE HAVANA—Physicians employed by mutual aid societies in Cuba went on strike Monday, when the societies refused to drop from their lists all persons able to pay the regular fees for medical assistance. About 2,440 patients in Havana hospitals alone will be affected in addition to thousands who receive free medical care every day at the dispensaries of the societies. Avanta Farm ULSTER PARK, NEW YORK WORKERS RECREATION PLACE BATES; $12.00 and $10.00 DIRECTIONS:—West Shore train, week-ends $3.75 round trip. By RAISE FUNDS! ¢ 52 Issues $2 City .. oF THE WESTERN WORKER A fighter to organize and Jead our struggles in the West BUILD IT! 26 Issues $1 NAME .srsecvepesecccevavevecccssesceese BEFECE seeettonsvenserenesens Western Worker Campaign Committee 1164 MARKET STREET, Gan Francisco, Calif. TRIUMPHANT END OF 5-YEAR PLAN ASSURED BY GAIN Workers Must Inten- sify Fight for Defense of Soviet Union Figures quoted in an article by W. M. Holmes, correspondent of the | British Daily Worker, show that in| the Soviet Union much was added during the first five months of this| year to the structure of socialist in- dustry. Heavy industry increased produc- tion in the first five months by 25.3 per cent of the total output in the| corresponding months of 1981. Light industry increased its production by 13.2 per cent. This is not merely an increase, but a progressive rise, For if we make the same compari- son between the first five months of 1931 and 1930, we find that in 1931 heavy industry only scored an in- crease of 14.8 per cent and light in- dustry of only 1.8 per cent. Ovetaking Capitalist Technique. Tt is of the utmost tmportance that the task of “overtaking and sur- passing capitalist technique” is be- ing fulfilled in the vital sections of heavy industry. Already the produc- tion of iron ang steel surpasses the output of any single European coun- try. During the month of May not one European country was able to report a production of pig iron amounting to 400,000 tons. In this| month, however, the Soviet Union| had a production of 552,000 tons of pig iron. The steel production in England, which still stands relatively high in the scale of capitalist steel Producing countries, amounted to 430,000 tons during May. The steel| Production of the Soyiet Union in that month was at 497,000 tons. ‘The figures recorded by the capi- talist countries indicate further stag- nation and deoay. Those recorded by the Soviet Union show more vitality and mark further advances on the upward path, They are the measures | of the energy which is being applied successfully to the creation of So-| cialism. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1932 Page Three U. S. Capitalism Murdered Them Five Years Ago! N. SACCO B. VANZETTI + Pay Homage to Sacco and Vanzetti Aug. 22 Int'l Red Aid Urges Fight for Scottsboro Negro Boys in Memory of Dead Martyrs French Town Led by Mayor in Sacco-Vanzetti Square Protests Lynch Verdict BERLIN, Aug. 17.—On the occasion of the fifth anniver- sary of the bestial murder of Sacco and Vanzetti the Executive Committee of the International Red Aid which was responsible for the mobilization of millions of toilers of the whole world in the fight to save those victims of American capitalism, has i 7 ; \-— iggued a ringing call to the*. 7 tsboro mother finishes they sing world’s workers to remember |The International,’ and join in the the dead by fighting for the ¢#!! for ‘Amnesty!’ the main slogan ah ‘lof the campaign now going on thru~ freedom of the new victims—|out France for the liberation of all “ a all |¢lass war prisoners.” the Scottsboro boys and all/ts in Europe so in the United class war prisoners. |States Sacco-Vanzetti Day will be rew “August 22, 1932,” says the call,|membered as these dead workers “marks the fifth anniversary of the | would it to be—by demonstra- legal murder of Sacco and Vanzetti, | tions tt shout the country for the On this day the working class of the | fr world will pay homage to their names | Bey and cause for which they died. It will hurl its proletarian curse into the teeth of the American bourgeoisie, now whetting its appetite for another feast on human flesh. It will inscribe upon its standard: | | si and the increasing roster of class-wer prisoners. ae weer | Baltimore Meeting BALTIMORE, Md., Aug. 17—A Sacco-Venzetti and Orphan Jones anti-terror mass meeting will take place on Monday, August 22 at 8 p.m. at the Tom Mooney Hall, 20 Lloyd st. ie ae MILWAUKEE, Aug. 17.—On Mon- jday, August 22, 2:30 p. m., a mass “In the Name of Sacco and Van- zetti, the Scottsboro Boys Shall Not Die.” The appeal points out that the con- tinued murders, frameups and mass dom of Mooney, the Scottsboro | Pace Unsatisfactory. executions of workers and peasants | The victories won in the first five |of the world is the last, desperate at- Months of this year, which js the|tempt of the capitalist masters to| fourth and final year of the Five-|throw the burden of the crisis upon | meeting in commemoration of Sacco- Vanzetti will be held at “Old” Court House Square, E. Wells and N. Jeffer- son St. Year Plan, do not pass, however, as entirely satisfactory under the test of Bolshevik self-criticism. The coal and iron industries, on which rests the heavy responsibility of supplying fuel and material for all other in- dustries, are particularly urged to improve their efforts. True, the amount of iron smelted in ‘the first five months was greater by 27.6 cent than that of the corresponding period of 1931, But the capacity for increase is still greater. The failure of some other indus- tries to keep the prescribed and necessary pace is due to a shortage of iron. The motor-tractor industry, for instance, produced two anq a half times as many units, in the first five months of this year, as in 1931. But recently the rate has slackened for lack of iron., Labor Productivity Increased, But Not Enough. In general, the criticism levelled at the various branches of industry calls for greater efforts in the organiza- tion of labor for inereasing its pro- ductivity by the r use of the new machinery and by ening of the economic&l and tech- nical leadership of industry. According to the plan the predue- tivity of labor employed in heavy in- dustry was to be raised by 31 per cent during 1932, The first five months saw an increase of 11 per cent. The defective organization of labor is chiefly responsible for this unsatisfactory increase. Ang among the causes of this there is the ad- herence of some industrial leaders to the anti-socialist idea of “equaliza- tion” of wages, Now the fight is being intensified to secure intelligent application of the principle formulated by Com- rade Stalin of payment to strength- | the backs of the workers and to break \the resistance against imperialist war and intervention in the Soyiet Union. “Terror is their weapon to break the resistance of the colonial masses and the growing unity between the Black and White Workers,” This appeal of the International Red Aid for Sacco-Vanzetti Day comes in the mdist of the intensify- ing struggle throughout Europe for the Negro lads of the South, From Comrade Louis Engdahl who js cov- ering Europe with Mrs. Wright, one | of the mothers of the convicted boys, | the Daily Worker has received an in- teresting correspondence of how a| Communist municipal government in | France led by the mayor turned out | to greet him and adopted a resolution pledging “to mobilize the population | of this city and demand, as they did during the Sacco-Vanzetti campaign, | freedom for the Scottsboro Negro |onstration at the Public Square. Bar- boys.” berton, scene of vicious police terror “For the workers. of Bezons,” writes |since hte beginning of the crisis, and Comrade Engdahl, “stood in the fore- |famous for the Alexander kidnapping front of the Sacco-Vanzetti protest. |cac@, will have a demonstration at Bezons has a Sacco-Vanzetti Square, |3 p. m. with a beautiful garden, also the lo-| Demonstrations will also be held in cation of the municipal library and/Toledo, Erie, Warren, Canton, where reading rooms, the achievement of |several workers’ meetings have been the workers’ demonstraiton.” |broken up by police—Columbus and “Gabriel Peri, foreign editor of | Dayton. L’Humanite, Communist member of | the Chamber of Deputies, translates | into stirring French the penetrating appeal of the Scottsboro Mother. | French mothers with their children, listen intently. The translation is Core ee Series of Meets Throughout Ohio CLEVELAND, Ohio. — Scotsboro- Sacco-Vanzetti Demonstrations will |take place throughout the Ohio Dis- trict on Aug. 22. Some 50,000 work- Jers are expected to be reached by means of the demonstrations. The demonstrations will protest the |recent break-up of workers’ demon- | strations in Lorain and Wellsville, |Ohio, and the condemnation of the conduct of the Mayor and Lorsin in sending out police to shoot and club innocent men demandnig food. Demonstrations will take place in the following cities: Cleveland, Public Square, 6:30 p.m.: Cincinnati, Old Hospital Lot, 12th and Central; Younsstown, Telegram Square; Cuyahoga Falls, City Park. Alliance will have its first real dem- WINCHEVSKY CLUB PICNIC CHICAGO, Ill—The fifth pienic of the Morris Winchevsky Workers Club will be held at Milwaukee Woods on punctuated with verbal protests from | Sunday, Aug, 21. A prgoram of songs all parts of the tremendous throng. |and varied games has been arranged. ‘Assassins’, they call out, and as the! All workers are urged to attend. FOSTER ENTHUSES STEEL | Commu: ' i | Exposes Falsity of P. CLEVELAND, Ohio, Aug. 17. Z. Foster, Communis: { meetings as follows: Frid: | in Columbus at 8 p. m., at 12114 Perkins School Auditorium, Bowery * ' Calls Workers to Mighty New Struggle ai ' AND METAL CONVENTION nist Candidates Attend Birth of Union, Not Bankers’ Banquets rosperity Ballyhoo and After his meeting today in Cleveland, is Hall, Toledo; Saturday Tuesday at 8 p. m. at and West Exchange Sts, Akron. * * ' PITTSBURGH, Pa., Aug. 17.—Traditions of the 1919 struggle of 365,000 teel strikers gripped the whole steel ter as the leader of the his' Foster Tours Steel ind Mine Regions Thruout September William Z. Foster, Communist nominee for President of the United States, will tour through- out September mainly in the mine strike areas and the steel centers. | He will address meetings as fol- lows: | | Zeigler, Wl, Sept. 1; Gillespie, Ill, Sept. 3; Springfield, Ul., Sept. 4; Rock Island, Ill., Sept. 6; Rock- ford, Ill, Sept. 7; Kenosha, W Sept. 8; Chicago, Ill, Sept. ; South Chicago, Ill, Sept. 12; Gary, Ind., Sept. 13; Youngstown, Ohio, Sept. 15; Wheeling, W. Va., Sept. |16; McKeesport, Pa., Sept. 1 | | Johnstown, Pa., Sept. 19; Pitt | burgh, Pa., Sept. 21 and 22; New | Kensington, Pa., Sept. 23; Union- | town, Pa,, Sept. 25; Bellaire, Ohio,| | Sept. 26; Fairmont, W. Va-, Sept. 128, and Charleston, W. Va., Sept. ies | ‘PROSPERITY TALK HIDES NEW CUTS Foster Cites Detroit As Proof PITTSBURGH, Pa., Aug. 17.—In his speech before the National Con- |vention here, which launched Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, Foster cited his observations jin Detroit as proof that all workers jare faced with a new of wage- |cuts and cuts in relief to the job- less. In Detroit, jobless workers are \forced to live in tents in Clark Park, jin the middle of the city, and yet |there are 200,000 empty apartments in Detroit. “This is an example of the“insan- ity of the capitalist system,” said | Foster, “and is is a sample of what | workers.” Prosperity Talk Bunk Foster scoffed at the ballyhoo about “business recovery.” Stocks go up, now and then, he pointed out, |but production is going down. Right in the midst of the prosperity talk, last week, the business index took the sharpest drop since the be- ginning of the crisi “The new prosperity talk has a two-fold aim,” the Communist can- didate said. “First, it is to restore confidence in capitalist parties be- fore election, and, secondly, it is to make the workers accept new wage- cuts and especially relief cuts as mething temporary. “But the workers will learn from bitter experience. Those think | they will not fight are m: = St. Louis Victory. Foster then gave as an example the inspiring case of the St. Louis work- ers, who, with few struggle traditions and just a little leadership, forced the government to find money for relief where the officials had claimed they had none before. “We need only give the workers leadership and show them the way,” said Foster. He then warned against a new flood of demagogic arguments and showed how “Father Cox, Waters and especially Muste trick the work- ers and unemployed workers. Muste, especially, is now trying to burrow into the steel mill field, sensing that n. the | |its further existence means to the} anl metal workers national convention sere and roused every delegate to his feet, when, in the closing session, William Z. Foster marched up to the platform and addressed them. toric 1919 strike. Now he is Commu- —® nist candidate for president, and gen- eral secretary of the Trade Union Unity League. | James W. Ford, Communist candid- ate for vice-president of the United was in the hall, and both Fos. d Ford walked on the platform the cheres of all, There the munist candidates sat, not at rs’ banquets, but at the cradle a@ new organization for struggle t hunger and to save the lives toilers. Just Founded a Union All the delegates felt and under- | Stood that the Communist candidates and Communist Party platform be- longed to them, | The 140 delegates were just in a | three-day assembly, August 13 to 15, |the new Steel and Metal Workers In- jdustrial Union, Every delegate was Je is of the greater tasks and truggles shed on him as Foster de- cribed the changes recently in the steel industry. | In 1929, there were 3,200,000 steel workers tending ba \™ itno the framework of the whole industrial structure throughout the world. Today one-half of these are unem- ployed. The steel barons have al- ready cut into the lives and stand- ards of living of the steel slaves with two direct wage cuts and many in- direct cuts. Now 82 per eent of the blast furnaces lie coul. The glow of molten metal has died out and the masters of this industry are prepar- jing a third cut, reaching out their | grasping hands to take the last piece jof bread from the hungry mouths |of workers’ children. | More Will Be Fired Eyen in so-called prosperous times, Foster reminded the convention, the Q operated no higher than some 80 per cent of capacity. The markets of the world have been flooded. The steel giants, driving their workers with the lash of speed-up and ra- tionalization, have produced too much for capitalist markets. They cannot add new mills and they cannot add |new workers, On the contraty htey cannot continue to operate under can- |italist contre! without driving thou. |sands from their jobs. All signs point, therefore, to strug- jgles ahead for life itself, Foster warn- led the steel workers, Will Gain Strength- For nearly an hour Foster probed to the bottom of the steel and metal |workers’ problems, and inspired the close of the conyentino with the spir. it of struggle and with confidence in | their ability to win over all obstacles and gain new legions of workers for jan irresistable march to the goal. “Our union ean only live and grow by struggle,” said Foster. “Why do we have to have a fighting. policv? Because such an organization as the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers is a tool of. the bosses. It has been used to pre- vent the organization of steel and metal workers. For years they had an understanding with the Steel Trust. Such an organization is al- lowed a small fringe of workers. Our |union represents all the steel and metal workers. It stands for better conditions and higher wages for all steel workers. Therefore it must be a fighting union because enly by |fight can these be won from the rae pacious steel barons.” a struggle ie beginning there, After Foster's speech, he was elected to the National Board of the |new union, of which the convention |made Tom Mooney, a moulder and |the dean of American class-war pris- loners, the honorary chairman. according qualification. This will clear the way for the necessary effort to bring this final year of the Five-Year Plan to a triumphant conclusion. VOTE CO] ST Against Mina. wexe-cekeins poli BACKACHE? SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c State “ DAILY’ SHOWS US HOW NOT TO BE SLAVES!” Says Gary Steel Worker Helping Drive Dear Comrades: ® I am a steel worker, working in the tin mills of Gary, Indiana. For the last two years I have been prac- tically out of work. I have been working one day a week, sometimes a day a month. I was denied relief by the bosses of Gary. I have a fam- ily of four children, a wife and my- self. For the last six months I have been reading your paper. I didn’t know there was such a paper as the Yaily Worker unti] one day a fellov handed it to me on the street, J'7n I looked for it. I sure) yarious working-class organizations like it- It’s just the stuff that the! contributed §25 immediately and worke.s need, It shows us how not| pledged themselves to whole-heart- to oe slaves, I read in the Daily|cdiy enter the campaign to save the ‘at you are carrying on a drive for | «paily.” subscriptions. Gee, I would like to subscribe, myself. But we are half starved and I can’t subscribe. There is one thing I can do. Please send me an order for five copies so that I can sell these copies to my friends and read it myself. I'll try to get subscriptions, too. Workers in Gary need a paper like the Daily Worker to show us the way to fight against starvation. Com- rades, I wish I could do more for the paper, I really feel it is my own —a_ paper for the working people. — I. hope you will send me this bundle. ROCHESTER WORKERS HELP “DAILY” WITH FUNDS ROCHESTER, N. Y¥., Aug. 15.—A successful emergency conference to push the $40,000 “Save the Daily” drive was held here Sunday. A. Markoff, head of the Workers’ School in New York, told of the drastic financial situation of the Daily Worker and of the immediate steps that must be taken to save the paper from the danger of suspension. ‘The 60 to 70 delegates present from OLGIN APPEALS FOR DRIVE WASHINGTON, D, C,, Aug, 14.— After M. Olgin, editor of the Frel- heit, told of the financial crisis which was facing the Daily Worker, central ‘organ of the Communist Party, a conference held here raised campaign for the support of the $40,000 “Save the Dajly” campaign: “eee MILWAUKEE PUSHES DRIVE; HATHAWAY SPEAKS MILWAUKEE, Wisc, Aug. 16,— More than 150 delegates from work- ing-class organizations and many sympathetic intellectuals and Com- munist Party functionaries attended the Emergency Daily Worker Con~- ference held here yesterday to organ- ize a broad campaign fur support of the $40,000 “Save the Daily” drive. T remain, yours, A Gary Steel Worker, P ghd Ieee Editorial Note; The Daily Worker palls upon other readers to lend a i in the drive for 7,000 new subs and 7,000 new bundle orders, $59 and pledged to organize a wide | Skolnick CONTRIBUTIONS TO “DAILY? FUND DISTRICT 1—-BOSTON Henry L. Packer, Wakeficld, Mass. — DISTRICT 2—NEW YORK Ut & employees of rele Saactorium, Liberty, N. Far Rockaway |W. Pittara _ |R. Yelovich — | sympathizers. i. in, Bronx - | Paul Erlich, Kammeonga Lake, N. Y. New York City W. Ransford Staten Island Unit Weisberg — “Hinsdele, N. ¥. Workers’ Youth Club. Warren Krupnitrky Koehrer Kaminetsky in Roseman — Miller ne us sky Gorowitz — New York City Central Body Women’s Council, N Central Body Women’s Council, No. 2 Central Body Women's Council, Nes. 4 and 18 5.00 P. Marous sal ‘ es 2.00 A. Raiz, Brooklyn 2.00 Clarence Hathawey, National Cam- paign Manager of the Communist) Party, reported on the drastic situa~- tion of the Daily Worker and out- lined a plan of work for this District. $1.00, 3) Unit 8-30 [E. Colombo, Norwich, N, ¥,———-—-= Parkway Cafeteria, Brooklyn —-——— Charles Fox, Brooklyn |J. Greenfield Section 1, Unit $-A |Krotman Seetion 6, Unit 14 | David Dorenz Section 2, Unit 1 Section 2, Unit 7 1.00 1.00 1.00. New York City DISTRICT %—PUILADELPHIA ~ |J. J. Brodsky, Washington, D. ©, 5. Berg: Baltimove, Ma. altimore, Md. — Baltimore, Mad. Sree Sesbeesckseeiis 2 SesSe EREEEsE DISTRICT 6—CLEVELAND, Hinman, Akron, Ohio Cleveland aN 1-14 Seen ‘Williams fnavian Workers’ Club — 3-81 Daily Worker Reader Unit 8-41 Gianos Daily Worker Reader ——____ Ho pie Daily Worker Reader ——_. Me SIMOR een Coltection at meeting — eareeeRaiad DISTRICT HICAGO Chi Unit 697 Unit 528 A friend Unit 206 incr x Contribution of four workers——— A worker's contribution —— Unit 502 Lithuenian Worker: Branch 58 ete OOO District 8 D. W. Office._____ 35.00 Walter Snyder ———___ ee

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